Abstract

Enterovirus 71 (EV71) is a member of the species Human enterovirus A within the family Picornaviridae and is a major causative agent of epidemics of hand, foot and mouth disease associated with severe neurological disease. Three EV71 genogroups, designated A, B and C, have been identified, with 75–84 % nucleotide sequence similarity between them. Two strains, EV71-26M (genogroup B) and EV71-6F (genogroup C), were found to have distinct cell-culture growth (26M, rapid; 6F, slow) and plaque-formation (26M, large; 6F, small) phenotypes. To identify the genome regions responsible for the growth phenotypes of the two strains, a series of chimeric viruses was constructed by exchanging the 5′ untranslated region (UTR), P1 structural protein or P2/P3 non-structural protein gene regions plus the 3′UTR using infectious cDNA clones of both virus strains. Analysis of reciprocal virus chimeras revealed that the 5′UTRs of both strains were compatible, but not responsible for the observed phenotypes. Introduction of the EV71-6F P1 region into the EV71-26M clone resulted in a small-plaque and slow-growth phenotype similar to that of EV71-6F, whereas the reciprocal chimera displayed intermediate-growth and intermediate-sized plaque phenotypes. Introduction of the EV71-26M P2–P3–3′UTR regions into the EV71-6F clone resulted in a large-plaque and rapid-growth phenotype identical to that of strain EV71-26M, whereas the reciprocal chimera retained the background strain large-plaque phenotype. These results indicate that, although both the P1 and P2–P3–3′UTR genome regions influence the EV71 growth phenotype in cell culture, phenotype expression is dependent on specific genome-segment combinations and is not reciprocal.

Highlights

  • Enterovirus 71 (EV71) is a genetically diverse virus with an estimated genome evolution rate of 4.2–4.561023 substitutions per site year21 in the VP1 gene (Tee et al, 2010)

  • Based on the complete VP1 nucleotide sequence, EV71 strains 6F/AUS/6/99 (EV71-6F) and EV71-26M belong to genogroups C and B, respectively (McMinn et al, 2001)

  • EV71-6F and the rest of the EV71 genogroup C strains (EV71-6092 and EV71-4643) were found to cluster with CVA8; the remaining EV71 genogroup B strains were found to cluster with CVA5 and coxsackievirus A16 (CVA16)-Gunnell (Fig. 1)

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Summary

Introduction

Enterovirus 71 (EV71) is a genetically diverse virus with an estimated genome evolution rate of 4.2–4.561023 substitutions per site year in the VP1 gene (Tee et al, 2010). Three distinct EV71 genogroups, designated A, B and C, were identified by Brown et al (1999). All other EV71 isolates belong to either genogroup B or genogroup C, which are further divided into subgenogroups B1–B5 and C1–C5, respectively (Brown et al, 1999; Cardosa et al, 2003; McMinn et al, 2001; Shimizu et al, 2004; Tu et al, 2007). Co-circulation of these two distinct genogroups, B and C, in the same region has been well documented (Herrero et al, 2003; Lin et al, 2006; McMinn et al, 2001).

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